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   Book Info

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The Real Mother  
Author: Judith Michael
ISBN: 0060725176
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
The bestselling pseudonymous husband-wife duo Judith Barnard and Michael Fain return (after 1999's A Certain Smile) with a formulaic novel set in their hometown of Chicago. Saintly 27-year-old Sara Elliott works as City Greeter (aka "Everybody's Schlepper")—a job that swiftly, conveniently introduces her to both arch-villain Lew Corcoran and romantic hero Reuben Lister. Sara meant to be a doctor, but her paycheck provides for three adolescent half-siblings, ever since their mom, Tess, had a disabling stroke that landed her in a nursing home. All the other grownups have checked out—Sara's father died; Tess's second husband ran off; and Mack, eldest child of Tess's second marriage, has also vanished. Now Mack comes back, playing havoc with the kids' emotions and assaulting Sara's primacy. The novel is generally short on shades of gray, but Mack is coal black. When he isn't saying "shit" or "fuck" to his appalled, delighted sibs, he talks in odd litanies of three: "A fine robe finely made that feels fine." Ages before Sara catches on, the reader is certainly certain of the certainty that he's working with Lew to squelch Reuben's low-income housing project. Curiously, Chicago itself never comes to life, although Greenwich Village is finely drawn when Sara visits Reuben on his home turf. Alas, Mack burns down the house while she's trysting, but that's the kind of middle-America melodrama that Michael's readers seem to love. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Sara Elliott has forgone her dreams in order to raise her three younger stepsiblings. After her stepfather disappeared and her mother had a stroke, she gave up medical school, came back to Chicago, and took a job as a greeter for the city, helping high rollers find homes. Almost simultaneously, two men enter her sphere, and each has an agenda. Mack is the long-lost brother who left when things got difficult. Reuben is Sara's client but has the potential for being more. The children are ecstatic that Mack has returned, which Sara resents. And she finds it hard to trust him. He never talks about his past; his furtive actions do nothing to raise her expectations, and she doubts that he'll stick around. Reuben, on the other hand, is steady as a rock and seems to care about her and her emergency family, although he, too, is concealing something. As things progress, Sara must decide what is best for her as well as for those she mothers. In spite of the many complex family issues raised, this effort feels a bit lackluster for the popular husband-and-wife duo, but there is enough conflict, glamour, and intrigue to keep their fans happy. Patty Engelmann
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved




The Real Mother

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Judith Michael is beloved around the world for powerful stories of love and family. Now this renowned author returns with a richly emotional tale of the many kinds of love and the collision of good and evil that threatens to tear a family apart.

Sara Elliott has been forced to give up the life she's dreamed of to return home to Chicago and take charge of her sisters and brother. She finds a job and settles into the house she grew up in, building a life for ten-year-old Doug and teenagers Carrie and Abby.

But Sara has another brother, Mack, now twenty, who left home three years earlier. Suddenly he reappears, cheerful and unconcerned, as if he had never broken his promise to stay and help Sara with the children and the house. With bewildering volatility, Mack swings from kindness to cruelty, affection to hostility, keeping the family always on edge, his past and present a mystery. But with expensive gifts, storytelling, and the excitement of his presence, he is winning over the children, and sometimes the four of them stand together against Sara.

Mack challenges all Sara has achieved in trying to be a mother and keep her family together. And he does it at a time when she is confronted by crises at work that spill over into her home. Suddenly, events seem to be speeding past and Sara feels she cannot slow them down to regain control.

And then, when she thinks her life has room only for work and family, she meets Reuben Lister, a client from New York. As Sara helps him find and furnish a house and explore the city, they discover a closeness neither has known before and share new ways of dealing with conflicts each has always faced alone. Together, Sara andReuben find answers to the questions: What is a mother? What is a parent? What is a family?

This is Judith Michael's most poignant exploration of the pressures and joys facing modern adults and children, in a story that will resonate with everyone for its universal themes and discoveries.

About the Author:

Judith Michael is the pseudonym of husband-and-wife writing team Judith Barnard and Michael Fain. They live in Chicago, Illinois, and Aspen, Colorado.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The bestselling pseudonymous husband-wife duo Judith Barnard and Michael Fain return (after 1999's A Certain Smile) with a formulaic novel set in their hometown of Chicago. Saintly 27-year-old Sara Elliott works as City Greeter (aka "Everybody's Schlepper")-a job that swiftly, conveniently introduces her to both arch-villain Lew Corcoran and romantic hero Reuben Lister. Sara meant to be a doctor, but her paycheck provides for three adolescent half-siblings, ever since their mom, Tess, had a disabling stroke that landed her in a nursing home. All the other grownups have checked out-Sara's father died; Tess's second husband ran off; and Mack, eldest child of Tess's second marriage, has also vanished. Now Mack comes back, playing havoc with the kids' emotions and assaulting Sara's primacy. The novel is generally short on shades of gray, but Mack is coal black. When he isn't saying "shit" or "fuck" to his appalled, delighted sibs, he talks in odd litanies of three: "A fine robe finely made that feels fine." Ages before Sara catches on, the reader is certainly certain of the certainty that he's working with Lew to squelch Reuben's low-income housing project. Curiously, Chicago itself never comes to life, although Greenwich Village is finely drawn when Sara visits Reuben on his home turf. Alas, Mack burns down the house while she's trysting, but that's the kind of middle-America melodrama that Michael's readers seem to love. Agents, Jane Rotrosen and Meg Ruley. (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Readers will be disappointed with Michael's (A Certain Smile) first book after a six-year absence. Weak characters along with sappy dialog won't entertain for long. After her father and brother disappear, and with her mother recovering from a stroke in a nursing home, Sara makes the decision to leave medical school to care for her younger siblings in Chicago, where she takes a job as a greeter who helps the rich find homes. Things seem to be going along reasonably well when her missing brother returns home. Meanwhile, Sara has a budding romance with an attractive and mysterious client that starts to complicate her life. A subplot involving some of her unsavory past clients doesn't do much to enhance the overall story. Sara's suffering becomes tedious as the plot struggles to strike a balance among romance, suspense, and an examination of family relationships. Still, Michael is a brand name in women's fiction, and public libraries should purchase accordingly. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 10/15/04.]-Margaret Hanes, Sterling Heights P.L., MI Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Troubled family, endless complications. Sara Elliot was always the perfect one: first-born, straight-A student, bound for medical school, etc. But she gave up her dream three years ago, at 24, when a stroke left her mother infirm and speechless and Sara devoted her life to caring for her adolescent sisters, Carrie and Abby, and ten-year-old brother Doug, meanwhile sticking with her own thankless job of finding luxury housing for loudmouthed rich people who dress badly and condescend to her. Yet, selfless to a fault, Sara never complains, says anything rude or funny, or even asks the burning question that every put-upon soap-opera heroine must ask: When will it be my turn? Maybe never. Mack, her manic, self-absorbed, younger brother is back in town. Perhaps Sara will be forced to confront the flaws in his volatile character-once she gets a nutritious dinner on the table, coaxes her sibs to eat their vegetables and do their homework, and offers moral guidance, fresh bread, and words of wisdom to all. Yet a romantic heart still beats faintly in the steel bosom of this annoying female robot: Reuben, a handsome, rich, also perfect client, seems to be single. But, wait! Is that a vengeful, money-hungry wife in his closet, claiming that Reuben's bestial sexual demands forced her to have abortions? Sara would cry, if she weren't a robot. The march of the subplots begins (cue the mighty Wurlitzer). Mack throws a tantrum in the nursing home where his addled mother languishes and explains why he's so messed up before his dreams of glory make him easy prey for a cigar-chomping, casino-building monster, another of Sara's clients. Reuben's wife decides to accept a few zillion dollars, thus freeingReuben to buy a cool, minimalist loft in New York. But it's not a real home, Sara frets . . . . Happy ending, rife with platitudes, and it's a wrap. Podgy prose, bland characters, dated story from this ever-popular husband-and-wife team (A Certain Smile, 1999, etc.). Agent: Jane Berkey/Jane Rotrosen Agency

     



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